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From: "Alun L. Palmer" on Sun 18 Sep 2005 07:19
" wrote in From: Alun L. Palmer on Sep 17, 8:07 am The only point where I differ is that I'm personally convinced that abolition of the Morse test would have been carried in the ITU in 1993 if it could only have got to the floor. Those who delayed it did so precisely because they knew that. That's a typical tactic, found at any large conclave/conference. The ITU is one country one vote, so the US is no more influential there than Monaco or Luxembourg. Only when it comes to the VOTE ITSELF. It's fairly obvious that the larger-population countries have larger delegates (and the 'guests' who are not supposed to have any voting power). With more people in a delegation, the more people there are to meet with other delegations away from the assembly and do one-on-one salesmanship for "their side." Then you have the many months prior to a WRC where the delegates have been largely identified on the ITU listings (plus their hotels/lodgings per delegation identified) so that "salesmanship" can be applied. The major "salesmanship" effort is on OTHER radio matters, of course, and - contrary to specific-interest-on-ham-radio groups - is of a greater international importance in radio regulations. The IARU as a collective body is larger than the ARRL and their opinion-influence on the voting delegates is stronger than the ARRL's influence. When the IARU came out against amateur radio licensing code testing a year prior to WRC-03, that sent a "message" (in effect) to other administrations' delegates, a "set-up" for the future voting. The IARU had not yet been of a consensus on S25 modernization the decade before WRC-03. One problem of American radio amateurs is that they do NOT, as a general rule, look any further than American ham radio magazines for "news." While the ITU has a number of easily- downloadable files on regulatory information, most of it is available only to "members" on a subscription basis (members would be "recognized" administration delegations or delegates). They don't much bother with the FCC freely-available information even though the FCC is their government's radio regulatory agency. News that does get down to the individual-licensee level is thus rather "filtered" by intermediate parties. That makes it very easy for them to NOT spend time looking for news elsewhere and they get to play with their radios longer. :-) It's also a ripe area for any group to do influence-control on many without them realizing what is happening. |
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